Amboy
United States · Americas

About Amboy
Amboy is a ghost town along Route 66 in the Mojave Desert region of Southern California. Nearby is Amboy Crater, a popular tourist attraction since the Route 66 days, a 6,000-year-old cinder cone volcano and one of the youngest volcanic fields in the U.S.
Amboy travel guide
Understand
Amboy is a ghost town located in south central San Bernardino County along Route 66 and the BNSF Railway line between Kingman, Arizona and Barstow, California. It has a population of five (2000); what remains of the town is owned by a private preservationist. First settled in 1858, the town was established in 1883. It was founded by the Atlantic and Pacific Railroad as one of a so-called "alphabetical series" of railway outposts in the steam locomotive era – but trains no longer stop, not even to deliver water to this tiny desert point. Back in the day, railroad lines from several companies catered to mining interests – from gold and other ores in the nearby hills, to borax from Death Valley and Beatty, Nevada – carrying bulk product to Amboy and the long-distance lines of the (then) Santa Fe Railway. Route 66 provided another boom-bust cycle. In the 1930s, the road supported the economies of the communities like Amboy through which it passed. During the 1940s, tourism declined but the remaining travelers' need for lodging, meals and gasoline kept the town going. The town largely remained this way until 1973 when Interstate 40 opened. The Interstate took a more direct route to the north through the Bristol Mountains, bypassing Amboy altogether. Today, the old US Route 66 through Amboy is on a 70 mi (110 km) segment of San Bernardino County Route 66, connecting with Interstate 40 on either segment end. It has a historic restaurant-motel (no services) and a Route 66 tourist shop (as of 2020). Just to the west is the Amboy Crater, a 6,000-year-old cinder cone volcano making it one of the youngest volcanic fields in the United States. And as one of the few extinct volcanoes along Route 66, this was a popular sight for travelers. It is an example of a very symmetrical volcanic cinder cone and has a 24 square miles (62 km2) lava field to the west. In 1973 it was designated the Amboy Crater National Natural Landmark. Southeast of Amboy is Bristol Lake, a dry lake with salt
Getting there
Most travelers will arrive by car on what was once Route 66, also known as National Old Trails Highway, now San Bernardino County Route 66, from direction of Barstow and Ludlow (west) or Needles and Arizona state line (east). Other travelers may arrive on Amboy Road from the south from Twentynine Palms and Joshua Tree National Park. There is a private landing strip in the immediate area. A few cinema stars have flown in on private aircraft to reach the area, as the town's deserted and remote location has occasionally been used in movie location shooting.
See
While much of the town has been demolished, a few buildings still stand: the former Amboy School, closed since 1999; an abandoned church. A shoe tree once stood along Route 66 in Amboy, but collapsed under their weight in 2010 and is no more. There was a subsequent attempt to decorate a "lingerie bush" with various undergarments. Train watching — a major BNSF railroad line runs through Amboy, paralleling Route 66. The line carries long cargo trains for BNSF and Amtrak's Southwest Chief passenger line. Railroad enthusiasts may find interest in the nearby ghost towns to the west en route to Ludlow. Refer to the Ludlow article for more detail.
Do
1 Amboy Crater (2 mi / 3.2 km east of Amboy on County 66). The hike to the crater and back to the highway can take 2–3 hours.
Buy
1 Roy's Motel & Café, 87520 National Trail Hwy, ☏ +1 760-733-1066. The only working fuel station in the area. This site was a busy automotive garage and eatery in Route 66's heyday. When the Interstate highway bypassed the town, the repair garage and motel closed. Fuel is still available (but expensive, given the remote location) and the next station is many miles across the desert. The cafe had continued operation for several years but difficulties getting potable water to the site forced its closure.
Sleep
The motel at Roy's, while still standing, is in poor, deteriorating condition. The nearest available lodging is also in Ludlow, west; or Barslow, west; Needles, east; Twentynine Palms, south (same as Eat options above).
Go next
West towards I-40 at Ludlow — Train watching and railroad ghost towns of Bagdad, Siberia and Klondike: once stops on the railroad, now mostly razed ghost towns. North towards Mojave National Preserve — Sand dunes, mountain ranges, and mesas with three types of deserts: the Mojave, Great Basin, and Sonoran. South to Twentynine Palms and Joshua Tree National Park — Nearest city with services. The park is home to the Joshua tree and two desert ecosystems, and is a favorite for campers, hikers, and rock-climbers.
Overview adapted from Wikipedia, travel guide fromWikivoyage (CC BY-SA)。Photography via Wikimedia Commons.